2 Groups Laying Plans To Develop National Exams

Contending that the current array of national, state, and local
tests is inadequate to spur improvements in education, two prominent
groups are laying plans to develop a national examination that all
students would take.

Members of President Bush's Education Policy Advisory Committee this
month are considering a proposal to convene a panel of experts to draw
up examinations that could be put in place "within the next few
years."

And the National Center on Education and the Economy, which in June
issued a report calling for all students to attain a national standard
based on a series of assessments, is exploring ways to follow up on
that recommendation.

Although the proposals are being developed separately, both are
aimed at raising student achievement by requiring all students to
demonstrate competency. If they are implemented, said Paul H. O'Neill,
chairman of the President's panel, schools will have better information
than they do now about where to place resources to make
improvements.

"My own view," said Mr. O'Neill, chief executive officer of the
Aluminum Company of America, "is that we need a test that can be given
to individual children, the results of which can be given to the child
and teacher to help better inform all parties how the child is gaining
the competencies necessary to be a participating citizen."

"We have some good tests that tell us something," he added, "but
they don't tell us in a way that would allow us to make specific
interventions in the process to do something. They tell us we're not
doing very well; they don't suggest why not."

In addition, said Lauren B. Resnick, a trustee of the center on
education and the economy, a properly developed examination system
would "ratchet the system up" by encouraging schools to focus on
higher-level abilities, rather than the basic skills current tests
measure.

"We can't continue with the kinds of tests that are driving the
American system," she said. "The goals today for schools are not the
goals of 40 or 50 years ago, yet we have the tools of 40 or 50 years
ago."

But some testing critics and education officials warn that a
national examination could exert undue influence on schools.

U.S. Secretary of Education Lauro F. Cavazos, in a letter to Mr.
O'Neill, said an examination "administered, controlled, or directed by
the federal government would be a mistake."

"Not only would such a program open the door to a new and dangerous
level of political influence," Mr. Cavazos wrote, "it would alter two
centuries of tradition regarding the respective roles of the federal
and state governments in education."

Some state officials, moreover, suggest that a national test would
be a step backward at a time when states and districts are developing
new and better methods of measuring student abilities.

But Chester E. Finn Jr., a member of the President's panel,
responded that the national interest in gathering data about student
achievement may override states' imperatives, much as the national
interest in school desegregation overrode claims that "states' rights"
allowed segregated schools.

In the 1950's and 60's, he said, "states strongly resisted the
national imperative; they wanted to be free to do it their own way.
This is, albeit more benign and innocent, another version of the
states-rights argument."

'A Missing Piece'

The President's advisory committee on education policy, a 24-member
panel of business leaders, educators, and public officials, first
broached the idea of a national test in January, when it recommended
that every student in grades 4, 8, and 12 be tested in five key subject
areas. (See Education Week, Jan. 17, 1990.)

The panel revisited the issue in July, according to Albert Shanker,
president of the American Federation of Teachers and a committee
member, when it considered ways to measure progress toward the national
education goals set by Mr. Bush and the nation's governors.

"We're not going to figure out whether the national goals are met
unless there is some form of national assessment," Mr. Shanker
said.

An ad hoc subcommittee, which met on the issue in August, concluded
that current tests are inadequate, said Mr. Finn, a professor of
education and public policy at Vanderbilt University.

"There was quite a lot of conviction in the group that the current
array of instruments is not getting the job done," said Mr. Finn, who
also serves as chairman of the governing board of the National
Assessment of Educational Progress.

"The situation has to change in a significant way," he argued. "I
want to get 'outcomes' information about student performance to the
kid, parent, and building level. That's a necessary, currently missing
piece of the puzzle."

Citing a well-publicized study that found that the overwhelming
majority of elementary students performed "above average" on
standardized achievement tests, Mr. Finn added that current tests often
provide too rosy an assessment of children's abilities.

At the same time, he said, the NAEP program, the only current
national assessment of its kind, is unable to link national goals for
performance with the achievement of individual students.

"What good does it do to persuade the country that the goals are
worth striving for," he asked, "if there is no way to know how your
kid, school, or school district is doing in relation to them?"

"People are coming around to the psychology," Mr. Finn added, "that
the kind of educational decisions that result in changed behavior in
kids occur at the individual, classroom, and building level.
Information at the state level is much too distant to alter Bobby's
behavior vis-a-vis his science homework."

In addition, said Mr. O'Neill, current tests are too fragmented to
allow schools and districts to know whether their reforms are making a
difference.

"In every hamlet in the country, people are running around with
ideas," the advisory-panel chairman said. "But in the absence of more
specific information, every idea on the planet is being tried, whether
it makes any sense or not. We're not dealing systematically with things
that are holding us back."

But Edward D. Roeber, director of the Michigan Education Assessment
Program, called a new national test a "quick and dirty approach" that
was unlikely to result in improved schools.

"It amazes me that business officials are proposing education
solutions they wouldn't use in their own companies," he said. "They
wouldn't evaluate a car coming off the assembly lines by seeing if it
has all four wheels intact. They've learned from the Japanese that the
fit, finish, and feel of a car is what sells it. That's much more
complex.''

Spending Money

To develop a new national examination, Mr. Shanker--who did not
attend the August meeting--proposed in a memorandum that the
President's advisory committee ask Mr. Bush to appoint a panel of
experts in measurement and curriculum who would put together "a number
of national examinations within the next few years."

Mr. Shanker suggested that the panel start with "those representing
our most ambitious goals: math, science, and literacy," and urged a
"national investment" of $200 million to $300 million for the
effort.

The union president acknowledged that the sum would represent a
considerable increase over the $20 million the federal government
currently spends on NAEP, but said such additional funds were
appropriate.

"If we're spending $200 billion in education, we've got to spend
money to find out how we're doing," he said.

Mr. Finn said the issue of spending was a "red herring."

"This is the only aspect of the entire education budget of the
nation," he said, "where people regard $50 million to $100 million as
an astonishing sum."

"Spending on elementary and secondary education is about $210
billion," Mr. Finn added. "One percent of that is $2 billion. I don't
regard 1 percent for feedback on outcomes an unreasonable share. But if
you looked at anybody and said, 'We should spend $2 billion for
testing,' he would say you should have your head examined."

Mr. O'Neill added that the proposed new examination might in fact
save money by replacing some existing tests.

"There's a lot of testing going on that doesn't have utility," he
said. "A good test may be free--there may be a reduction in the cost of
testing."

He also suggested that any proposed national examination be
voluntary, and that states and districts have the option to choose
whether to participate.

"It's a mistaken notion to see testing as a federal issue," Mr.
O'Neill said. "It's a local issue. But if there were a good test that
90 percent of the experts said would do the job, would people adopt it
or not? I think they would."

Linking Tests

Mr. Finn suggested that a new testing system would not necessarily
take the form of a completely new examination. One lower-cost
alternative, he said, would be to statistically link existing state
tests with a national test, such as NAEP.

Such a procedure would enable states to compare their results with
those of the nation and other states, without going through the costly
and burdensome step of administering a new test.

But David W. Hornbeck, a former state superintendent of education in
Maryland, argued in a paper prepared for a conference on the issue this
week that such links might be barred by the 1988 legislation that
reauthorized NAEP, a Congressionally mandated program that tests a
national sample of students in several subjects. That law, Mr. Hornbeck
noted, prohibited NAEP results from being used to rank or compare
schools or school districts.

In addition, cautioned Ramsay W. Selden, director of the state
education-assessment center at the Council of Chief State School
Officers, linking different tests poses technical problems.
Statisticians must ensure that the tests measure the same content and
have the same level of difficulty, he said.

Such problems doomed an attempt in the 1970's to link tests to
evaluate federal compensatory-education programs, added Walter M.
Haney, senior research fellow at the Center for the Study of Testing,
Evaluation, and Educational Policy at Boston College.

"We are not prepared to say that [linking] is the solution," Mr.
Selden said. "The word is still out on that."

Sending a Message

The plan by the National Center on Education and the Economy,
meanwhile, is pursuing a separate tack.

Based on the recommendations of a report issued in June by its
Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce, the Rochester,
N.Y.-based research and policy center is developing a plan to create a
"certificate of initial mastery" that students should acquire.

In the report, the panel proposed, among other recommendations, that
a national standard for educational performance be set and that
students at about age 16 be required to demonstrate, on a series of
performance-based assessments, that they have met the standard. Those
who did would be awarded a "certificate of initial mastery" and be
eligible for employment or further education and training. (See
Education Week, June 20, 1990.)

Such a system would encourage all students to work harder in school
by sending a message that the work they do matters, according to Ms.
Resnick, who is director of the Learning Research and Development
Center at the University of Pittsburgh.

"The current system in America is strongly organized not to convey
that message, except to that small percentage who enter secondary
school knowing that they want to go to a competitive college," she
said.

"For everybody else, by and large, the specifics of what you do
don't matter," Ms. Resnick continued. "If you accumulate Carnegie
units, as long as they have the right labels, you can go to
college."

"It's even worse for the non-college-bound," she added. "Nobody ever
asks to see your transcript. The only thing that matters is a diploma,
and that you can get from time in your seat."

Ms. Resnick acknowledged that the results from the assessments could
be used to hold schools accountable for student performance. But, she
said, if they are developed properly, they could accomplish what
accountability is supposed to achieve--improvements in schooling.

"Rather than fighting the accountability movement, we want to join
it, but on terms that ratchet the system up," she said. "Putting
accountability measures on that keep showing we are not doing what we
want, but that do nothing to give schools the tools they need, is not
going to get us where we want to go."

If the center on education and the economy succeeds in carrying out
its plans, at least one prominent critic of an earlier attempt at a
national examination would support it.

Paul G. LeMahieu, who earlier this year conducted a highly visible
protest against a plan to expand NAEP, observed that, unlike the
current national assessment, the assessments recommended in the
center's report would include student portfolios, performances, and
projects.

"That's the kind of direction I envision," said Mr. LeMahieu,
director of the division of research, evaluation, and test development
for the Pittsburgh public schools.

Vol. 10, Issue 4, Page 1, 14

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